
In fact, my grandfather called me bird when I was little (the camera in this photo actually belonged to him) because I was known to not sit still, constantly flying off to a new adventure. All these years later, that has yet to change. I find peace in curiosity, adventure, and perspectives. I'm able to see all angles. Naturally, I melted all of this into what was originally a hobby. A hobby that started off in 2001 when my parents left their camera out.
Luckily, like birds, I adapted and grew, but I have always been that curious girl seeing beauty in little things and big moments (from flowers, textures on a plated dish, love languages, how a band can move the crowd, to someone's hard work they did to put together an event).
Somewhere along the way, this stopped being just a hobby and became the way I understand the world and get to immerse myself in other's worlds as well, making me realize how important connection is. It's how I tell stories, not just mine, but yours too.
So, "bird" still fits. Only now, I've found where I'm meant to land.
Anyways, enough about me. Keep reading to see why I love doing what I do.

There’s nothing like the energy in a room when music takes over.
It’s loud, it’s chaotic, it’s emotional - and somehow, it connects everyone in the same way all at once. For a little while, nothing else matters except what you’re hearing and feeling in that moment.
That’s what I love capturing. Not just the performance, but everything surrounding it - the crowd, the movement, the way the room shifts with every song. The lights, the reactions, the small moments happening in between the big ones. It’s never just about what’s on stage, it’s about what’s happening everywhere else too.
I’m always paying attention to the details people might miss. The way someone reacts to a favorite song, the connection between the artist and the crowd, the split-second moments that make the night what it is. Sometimes it’s someone’s first show, sometimes it’s everything they needed in that moment. Either way, it matters and music is powerful.
There’s a rhythm to it all - the artist giving, the crowd responding, the energy building and breaking. I like finding the exact moments where all of that meets. The ones that are gone just as quickly as they happen, but stick with people long after. That kind of energy doesn’t last forever, but a photo can.

Everyone is so different and that’s the part I find the most fascinating.
What people are drawn to, what they love, what makes their heartbeat pick up a little… it all shows up, even in the simplest photo.
The way you exist, the little things you don’t even realize you do...
that’s what makes you you.
Personality portraits aren’t about being perfect. They’re about being real. I want you to feel comfortable, confident, and seen when you’re in front of my camera. Not like you have to perform or be anything other than yourself, just space to exist as you are, fully and honestly.
And sometimes, the best part is watching people surprise themselves. Seeing themselves the way others already do (worthy, powerful, interesting, and enough exactly as they are). Not a version that’s edited to fit something else, but one that actually feels like them.
Because you don’t need to become someone different to be worth capturing... you already are.
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I’m a foodie through and through... and honestly, the hardest part about editing food photos now is that UberEats exists.
It’s nearly impossible to sit there adjusting color and texture without immediately wanting to order everything in sight.
But that’s also why I love it. Food isn’t just something you eat - it’s texture, color, movement, detail. The crisp on the outside, the softness underneath, the way a sauce catches the light, the way everything is intentionally placed. There’s so much care and thought behind every dish, and that deserves to be shown.
I love working with restaurants that are proud of what they’re putting out.
The ones that care about the ingredients, the process, the experience they’re creating for people. Because food is connection - it brings people together, starts conversations, turns a simple night into something memorable.
Getting to capture something that I already know people are going to gather around, talk over, and enjoy? That’s one of my favorite things to be a part of.

Love doesn’t look one way and it shouldn’t.
It’s messy, soft, loud, quiet, playful, steady… and completely different for everyone. No two relationships move the same, and that’s what makes them so interesting to me. That’s what I love documenting.
The way you interact, the way you move together, the things that make your relationship yours. The quiet glances, the inside jokes, the way you reach for each other without thinking. Not posed, not forced - just real.
Just what it actually feels like to be together.
All love is welcome here.
I want you to feel safe, seen, and completely yourself in front of my camera, no matter who you are or who you love. This space is about showing up as you are and having that be more than enough.
Weddings, engagements, elopements, or no reason at all - big moments or just because you want to remember this version of your love.
If it matters to you, it’s worth capturing.

Events have always stood out to me - not just for what they are, but for everything that goes into them. The planning, the details, the coordination… all of it built on someone’s vision and a lot of hard work behind the scenes.
Whether it’s for a cause, a brand, or a celebration, there’s intention behind every piece of it. You can feel it in the room - in the way it’s set up, how it flows, how people move through it. That’s what I focus on capturing. Not just what the event looked like, but the energy of it, the moments that reflect everything you put into making it happen. The big highlights and the in-between details that don’t always get noticed, but matter just as much.
I also understand what goes on behind the curtain. Working alongside production, respecting the pace, the setup, and the people making it all happen. At the end of the day, it’s about showing off the work you put in and documenting it in a way that actually reflects what it felt like to be there.